What's the earliest known use of the term "farming"?
The first time I saw the term farming in a videogame context was bonewall farming / "bonefarming" in Diablo 2. It makes sense in this case since you "plant" a bonewall then "harvest" items, as opposed to more common use these days where you just kill enemies.
This is the earliest I remember personally seeing the term. But is it older?
Best Answer
I think the earliest instances of at least the term itself, refer to generating in game items and selling them to other players for real currency, for example 'gold farming'.
There might be earlier less well known instances, but the first one that made the news outside of the game it was in was, most likely Ultima Online (1997). Wired Magazine wrote a nice retrospective on the subject, also mentioned in this article.
Other early games where this became a feature (whether wanted or not) were Everquest (1999), RuneScape (2001) and of course World of Warcraft (2004).
Later on the term expanded to include repetitive tasks done by the players themselves in order to gain resources (as opposed to grinding, which is usually about gaining XP or advancing levels faster).
The activity itself of course predates online games as described above (early RTS games like Dune 2 (1992) for example literally made you deploy a harvester to collect spice, and more spice meant a bigger/better army), but I don't recall these being referred to as such.
Pictures about "What's the earliest known use of the term "farming"?"
what. (Bo Burnham FULL SHOW HD)
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Enoch Patro, Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio, Andrea Piacquadio